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Dive into the research topics where Ramdane Harouaka is active.

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Featured researches published by Ramdane Harouaka.


Pharmacology & Therapeutics | 2014

Circulating tumor cells: Advances in isolation and analysis, and challenges for clinical applications

Ramdane Harouaka; Zhigang Kang; Siyang Zheng; Liang Cao

Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) are rare cancer cells released from tumors into the bloodstream that are thought to have a key role in cancer metastasis. The presence of CTCs has been associated with worse prognosis in several major cancer types, including breast, prostate and colorectal cancer. There is considerable interest in CTC research and technologies for their potential use as cancer biomarkers that may enhance cancer diagnosis and prognosis, facilitate drug development, and improve the treatment of cancer patients. This review provides an update on recent progress in CTC isolation and molecular characterization technologies. Furthermore, the review covers significant advances and limitations in the clinical applications of CTC-based assays for cancer prognosis, response to anti-cancer therapies, and exploratory studies in biomarkers predictive of sensitivity and resistance to cancer therapies.


Journal of Laboratory Automation | 2013

Circulating tumor cell enrichment based on physical properties.

Ramdane Harouaka; Merisa Nisic; Siyang Zheng

The metastatic dissemination and spread of malignant circulating tumor cells (CTCs) accounts for more than 90% of cancer-related deaths. CTCs detach from a primary tumor, travel through the circulatory system, and then invade and proliferate in distant organs. The detection of CTCs from blood has been established for prognostic monitoring and is predictive of patient outcome. Analysis of CTCs could enable the means for early detection and screening in cancer, as well as provide diagnostic access to tumor tissues in a minimally invasive way. The fundamental challenge with analyzing CTCs is the fact that they occur at extremely low concentrations in blood, on the order of one out of a billion cells. Various technologies have been proposed to isolate CTCs for enrichment. Here we focus on antigen-independent approaches that are not limited by specific capture antibodies. Intrinsic physical properties of CTCs, including cell size, deformability, and electrical properties, are reviewed, and technologies developed to exploit them for enrichment from blood are summarized. Physical enrichment technologies are of particular interest as they have the potential to increase yield and enable the analysis of rare CTC phenotypes that may not be otherwise obtained.


Clinical Chemistry | 2014

Flexible Micro Spring Array Device for High-Throughput Enrichment of Viable Circulating Tumor Cells

Ramdane Harouaka; Ming Da Zhou; Yin Ting Yeh; Waleed J. Khan; Avisnata Das; Xin Liu; Christine Christ; David T. Dicker; Tara S. Baney; Jussuf T. Kaifi; Chandra P. Belani; Cristina I. Truica; Wafik S. El-Deiry; Jeffrey P. Allerton; Siyang Zheng

BACKGROUND The dissemination of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) that cause metastases in distant organs accounts for the majority of cancer-related deaths. CTCs have been established as a cancer biomarker of known prognostic value. The enrichment of viable CTCs for ex vivo analysis could further improve cancer diagnosis and guide treatment selection. We designed a new flexible micro spring array (FMSA) device for the enrichment of viable CTCs independent of antigen expression. METHODS Unlike previous microfiltration devices, flexible structures at the micro scale minimize cell damage to preserve viability, while maximizing throughput to allow rapid enrichment directly from whole blood with no need for sample preprocessing. Device performance with respect to capture efficiency, enrichment against leukocytes, viability, and proliferability was characterized. CTCs and CTC microclusters were enriched from clinical samples obtained from breast, lung, and colorectal cancer patients. RESULTS The FMSA device enriched tumor cells with 90% capture efficiency, higher than 10(4) enrichment, and better than 80% viability from 7.5-mL whole blood samples in <10 min on a 0.5-cm(2) device. The FMSA detected at least 1 CTC in 16 out of 21 clinical samples (approximately 76%) compared to 4 out of 18 (approximately 22%) detected with the commercial CellSearch® system. There was no incidence of clogging in over 100 tested fresh whole blood samples. CONCLUSIONS The FMSA device provides a versatile platform capable of viable enrichment and analysis of CTCs from clinically relevant volumes of whole blood.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Separable Bilayer Microfiltration Device for Viable Label-free Enrichment of Circulating Tumour Cells

Ming Da Zhou; Sijie Hao; Anthony Williams; Ramdane Harouaka; Brett Schrand; Siddarth Rawal; Zheng Ao; Randall Brennaman; Eli Gilboa; Bo Lu; Shuwen Wang; Jiyue Zhu; Ram H. Datar; Richard J. Cote; Yu-Chong Tai; Siyang Zheng

The analysis of circulating tumour cells (CTCs) in cancer patients could provide important information for therapeutic management. Enrichment of viable CTCs could permit performance of functional analyses on CTCs to broaden understanding of metastatic disease. However, this has not been widely accomplished. Addressing this challenge, we present a separable bilayer (SB) microfilter for viable size-based CTC capture. Unlike other single-layer CTC microfilters, the precise gap between the two layers and the architecture of pore alignment result in drastic reduction in mechanical stress on CTCs, capturing them viably. Using multiple cancer cell lines spiked in healthy donor blood, the SB microfilter demonstrated high capture efficiency (78–83%), high retention of cell viability (71–74%), high tumour cell enrichment against leukocytes (1.7–2 × 103), and widespread ability to establish cultures post-capture (100% of cell lines tested). In a metastatic mouse model, SB microfilters successfully enriched viable mouse CTCs from 0.4–0.6 mL whole mouse blood samples and established in vitro cultures for further genetic and functional analysis. Our preliminary studies reflect the efficacy of the SB microfilter device to efficiently and reliably enrich viable CTCs in animal model studies, constituting an exciting technology for new insights in cancer research.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Circulating Tumor Cells in Melanoma Patients

Gary A. Clawson; Eric T. Kimchi; Susan D. Patrick; Ping Xin; Ramdane Harouaka; Siyang Zheng; Arthur Berg; Todd D. Schell; Kevin F. Staveley-O’Carroll; Rogerio I. Neves; Paul J. Mosca; Diane Thiboutot

Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) are of recognized importance for diagnosis and prognosis of cancer patients. With melanoma, most studies do not show any clear relationship between CTC levels and stage of disease. Here, CTCs were enriched (∼400X) from blood of melanoma patients using a simple centrifugation device (OncoQuick), and 4 melanocyte target RNAs (TYR, MLANA, MITF, and MIF) were quantified using QPCR. Approximately one-third of melanoma patients had elevated MIF and MLANA transcripts (p<0.0001 and p<0.001, respectively) compared with healthy controls. In contrast, healthy controls had uniformly higher levels of TYR and MITF than melanoma patients (p<0.0001). There was a marked shift of leukocytes into the CTC-enriched fractions (a 430% increase in RNA recovery, p<0.001), and no relationship between CTC levels and stage of disease was found. CTCs were captured on microfabricated filters and cultured. Captured melanoma CTCs were large cells, and consisted of 2 subpopulations, based on immunoreactivity. One subpopulation (∼50%) stained for both pan-cytokeratin (KRT) markers and the common leukocyte marker CD-45, whereas the second subpopulation stained for only KRT. Since similar cells are described in many cancers, we also examined blood from colorectal and pancreatic cancer patients. We observed analogous results, with most captured CTCs staining for both CD-45/KRT markers (and for the monocyte differentiation marker CD-14). Our results suggest that immature melanocyte-related cells (expressing TYR and MITF RNA) may circulate in healthy controls, although they are not readily detectable without considerable enrichment. Further, as early-stage melanomas develop, immature melanocyte migration into the blood is somehow curtailed, whereas a significant proportion of patients develop elevated CTC levels (based on MIF and MLANA RNAs). The nature of the captured CTCs is consistent with literature describing leukocyte/macrophage-tumor cell fusion hybrids, and their role in metastatic progression.


Cancer Biology & Therapy | 2015

Circulating tumor cell isolation during resection of colorectal cancer lung and liver metastases: a prospective trial with different detection techniques

Jussuf T. Kaifi; Miriam Kunkel; Avisnata Das; Ramdane Harouaka; David T. Dicker; Guangfu Li; Junjia Zhu; Gary A. Clawson; Zhaohai Yang; Michael F. Reed; Niraj J. Gusani; Eric T. Kimchi; Kevin F. Staveley-O'Carroll; Siyang Zheng; Wafik S. El-Deiry

Background: Colorectal cancer (CRC) metastasectomy improves survival, however most patient develop recurrences. Circulating tumor cells (CTCs) are an independent prognostic marker in stage IV CRC. We hypothesized that CTCs can be enriched during metastasectomy applying different isolation techniques. Methods: 25 CRC patients undergoing liver (16 (64%)) or lung (9 (36%)) metastasectomy were prospectively enrolled (clinicaltrial.gov identifier: NCT01722903). Central venous (liver) or radial artery (lung) tumor outflow blood (7.5 ml) was collected at incision, during resection, 30 min after resection, and on postoperative day (POD) 1. CTCs were quantified with 1. EpCAM-based CellSearch® system and 2. size-based isolation with a novel filter device (FMSA). CTCs were immunohistochemically identified using CellSearch®‘s criteria (cytokeratin 8/18/19+, CD45- cells containing a nucleus (DAPI+)). CTCs were also enriched with a centrifugation technique (OncoQuick®). Results: CTC numbers peaked during the resection with the FMSA in contrast to CellSearch® (mean CTC number during resection: FMSA: 22.56 (SEM 7.48) (p = 0.0281), CellSearch®: 0.87 (SEM ± 0.44) (p = 0.3018)). Comparing the 2 techniques, CTC quantity was significantly higher with the FMSA device (range 0–101) than CellSearch® (range 0–9) at each of the 4 time points examined (P < 0.05). Immunofluorescence staining of cultured CTCs revealed that CTCs have a combined epithelial (CK8/18/19) and macrophage (CD45/CD14) phenotype. Conclusions: Blood sampling during CRC metastasis resection is an opportunity to increase CTC capture efficiency. CTC isolation with the FMSA yields more CTCs than the CellSearch® system. Future studies should focus on characterization of single CTCs to identify targets for molecular therapy and immune escape mechanisms of cancer cells.


Cell Cycle | 2013

Predicting therapy response in live tumor cells isolated with the flexible micro spring array device

Jean-Nicolas Gallant; Elizabeth M. Matthew; Hairong Cheng; Ramdane Harouaka; Nicholas E. Lamparella; Miriam Kunkel; Zhaohai Yang; Harold A. Harvey; Leah Cream; Suresh M. Kumar; Gavin P. Robertson; Siyang Zheng; Joseph J. Drabick; Cristina I. Truica; Wafik S. El-Deiry

Cells disseminated from primary epithelial tumors into peripheral blood, called circulating tumor cells (CTCs), can be monitored to assess metastases and to provide a surrogate marker of treatment response. Here, we demonstrate how the flexible micro spring array (FMSA) device—a novel microfluidic device that enriches CTCs by two physical parameters: size and deformability—could be used in the rational development of treatment intervention and as a method to study the fundamental biology of CTCs. Cancer cells of different origins were spiked into healthy samples of donor blood to mimic blood samples of metastatic cancer patients. This spiked human blood was filtered using the FMSA device, and the recovered cells were successfully expanded in vitro and in a novel in vivo system. A series of experiments were performed to characterize these cells and to investigate the effect of chemotherapy on the resulting cultures. As few as 20 colon cancer cells in 7.5 mL blood could be isolated with the FMSA device, expanded both in vitro and in vivo and used at 25 cells per well to obtain significant and reliable chemosensitivity data. We also show that isolating a low number of viable patient CTCs and maintaining them in culture for a few weeks is possible. The isolation of viable cancer cells from human blood using the FMSA device provides a novel and realistic means for studying the biology of viable CTCs and for testing drug efficacy on these rare cells—a hypothesis that can be tested in future clinical trials.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2017

RAD51 Mediates Resistance of Cancer Stem Cells to PARP Inhibition in Triple-Negative Breast Cancer.

Yajing Liu; Monika L. Burness; Rachel Martin-Trevino; Joey Guy; Shoumin Bai; Ramdane Harouaka; Michael Brooks; Li Shang; Alex Fox; Tahra Luther; April Davis; Trenton L. Baker; Justin A. Colacino; Shawn G. Clouthier; Zhi Ming Shao; Max S. Wicha; Suling Liu

Introduction: PARP inhibitors have shown promising results in early studies for treatment of breast cancer susceptibility gene (BRCA)–deficient breast cancers; however, resistance ultimately develops. Furthermore, the benefit of PARP inhibitors (PARPi) in triple-negative breast cancers (TNBC) remains unknown. Recent evidence indicates that in TNBCs, cells that display “cancer stem cell” properties are resistant to conventional treatments, mediate tumor metastasis, and contribute to recurrence. The sensitivity of breast cancer stem cells (CSC) to PARPi is unknown. Experimental Design: We determined the sensitivity of breast CSCs to PARP inhibition in BRCA1-mutant and -wild-type TNBC cell lines and tumor xenografts. We also investigated the role of RAD51 in mediating CSC resistance to PARPi in these in vitro and in vivo models. Results: We demonstrated that the CSCs in BRCA1-mutant TNBCs were resistant to PARP inhibition, and that these cells had both elevated RAD51 protein levels and activity. Downregulation of RAD51 by shRNA sensitized CSCs to PARP inhibition and reduced tumor growth. BRCA1–wild-type cells were relatively resistant to PARP inhibition alone, but reduction of RAD51 sensitized both CSC and bulk cells in these tumors to PARPi treatment. Conclusions: Our data suggest that in both BRCA1-mutant and BRCA1–wild-type TNBCs, CSCs are relatively resistant to PARP inhibition. This resistance is mediated by RAD51, suggesting that strategies aimed at targeting RAD51 may increase the therapeutic efficacy of PARPi. Clin Cancer Res; 23(2); 514–22. ©2016 AACR.


Oncotarget | 2016

A multiplexed marker-based algorithm for diagnosis of carcinoma of unknown primary using circulating tumor cells

Elizabeth M. Matthew; Lanlan Zhou; Zhaohai Yang; David T. Dicker; Sheldon L. Holder; Bora Lim; Ramdane Harouaka; Siyang Zheng; Joseph J. Drabick; Nicholas E. Lamparella; Cristina I. Truica; Wafik S. El-Deiry

Real-time, single-cell multiplex immunophenotyping of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) is hypothesized to inform diagnosis of tissue of origin in patients with carcinoma of unknown primary (CUP). In 20 to 50% of CUP patients, the primary site remains unidentified, presenting a challenge for clinicians in diagnosis and treatment. We developed a post-CellSearch CTC assay using multiplexed Q-dot or DyLight conjugated antibodies with the goal of detecting multiple markers in single cells within a CTC population. We adapted our approach to size-based CTC enrichment protocols for capturing CTCs and subsequent immunofluorescence (IF) using a minimal set of markers to predict the primary sites for common metastatic tumors. The carcinomas are characterized with cytokeratin 7 (CK7), cytokeratin 20 (CK20), thyroid transcription factor 1 (TTF-1), estrogen receptor (ER) or prostate-specific antigen (PSA. IF has been optimized in cultured tumor cells with individual antibodies, then with conjugated antibodies to form a multiplex antibody set. With IF, we evaluated antibodies specific to these 5 markers in lung, breast, colorectal, and prostate cancer cell lines and blood from metastatic prostate and breast cancer patients. This advanced technology provides a noninvasive, diagnostic blood test as an adjunct to routine tissue biopsy. Its further implementation requires prospective clinical testing.


Cancer Research | 2011

Abstract 5214: Development of a microfiltration system for the improved detection and viable capture of metastatic circulating tumor cells

Ramdane Harouaka; Ming-Da Zhou; Jiayun Zhang; Waleed J. Khan; Siyang Zheng

The ability of metastatic cancer to release cells that travel through the circulatory system and invade different parts of the body accounts for over 90% of cancer related deaths. The fundamental challenge with detecting these circulating tumor cells (CTCs) in blood samples is the fact that they are so rare, with only a few tumors cells occurring among billions of blood cells. Since tumor cells are almost always significantly larger and more rigid than normal blood cells, size based separation has been demonstrated to be an effective method for CTC capture and enrichment. While useful for detection, size based techniques apply concentrated stresses that affect the viability of captured cells. We have incorporated novel spring structures into our microfilter design that mitigate the stresses experienced by CTCs during filtration to encourage their health and survival. The geometric design and filtration pressures have been optimized to maximize capture efficiency, enrichment against white blood cells, and tumor cell viability. This was achieved through repeated filtrations using a model system of fluorescently labeled cells from various established tumor cell lines spiked into healthy donor blood. The viability of captured cells has been confirmed through exclusion dye testing, and through the proliferation and culture of captured cells directly on the filter surface. The successful capture and primary culture of viable CTCs from clinical patient samples will allow unprecedented analysis and genetic testing of the cells directly responsible for metastasis. This could provide the basis for externally testing tumor cell response to a variety of anticancer drugs without having to expose a patient to the unnecessary cost and toxic effects of chemotherapy, thereby improving patient outcomes through the development of personalized treatment plans. Citation Format: {Authors}. {Abstract title} [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 102nd Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research; 2011 Apr 2-6; Orlando, FL. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2011;71(8 Suppl):Abstract nr 5214. doi:10.1158/1538-7445.AM2011-5214

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Siyang Zheng

Pennsylvania State University

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Cristina I. Truica

Penn State Cancer Institute

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Li Shang

University of Michigan

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Ming-Da Zhou

Pennsylvania State University

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Waleed J. Khan

Pennsylvania State University

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Yin-Ting Yeh

Pennsylvania State University

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